3.0.3

What's new in 3.0.2:- Touch Bar support for the new MacBook Pro- Reeder now uses the Mercury web parser (mercury.postlight.com) for the “Read Now” feature- Readability is no longer available (see readability.com for more info)- Fixed: Issues when adding Feedly accounts- Fixed: High disk storage usage

3.0.2

Dec 21, 2016

- Touch Bar support for the new MacBook Pro

- Reeder now uses the Mercury web parser (mercury.postlight.com) for the “Read Now” feature- Readability is no longer available (see readability.com for more info)

3.0.1

Aug 17, 2016

- “Copy link” now only copies the URL (the old behaviour, URL with title can be enabled in Settings>Services)- Improved display of author information in the article viewer- Feedbin: Improved syncing performance of saved searches- Fixed: Tag editing- Fixed: Arabic character display issues in the article viewer

3.0

Sep 29, 2015

What’s new:- Ready for OS X El Capitan- More themes- Updated UI- Support for sharing extensions- Unread and starred counts for smart folders- Hide smart folders in unread/starred view if there are no unread/starred items- Private browsing support (see Settings > Reading)- Display the URL in the status bar when hovering a link in the article viewer or browser- New article viewer display settings: separate font and uppercase options for the title- Fullscreen now also works when in minimized layout mode- New “Archive” folder in “All items” view mode which only shows read items (no unread or starred)- Pull to next/previous article

Fixed:- Inoreader authentication- Incorrect unread/starred counts- Reeder now uses San Francisco as UI font on El Capitan- Full screen split view on El Capitan- Various visual glitches on El Capitan- Adding a Feedly account using Google is now correctly reported as sign in from Mac (not iPhone)

2.0.3

Jun 17, 2014

What’s new:- Setting to skip the form and send immediately when saving to Pinboard or Delicious

Fixed:- Some links did not save to Delicious (non-ASCII characters in title)- Unclickable “Mark All as Read” button while article list filter is active- Fever: Only mark filtered items as read- Fever: Improved handling of self-signed certificates

Syncing with Fever and no articles are fetched? Please see the help section on http://reederapp.com/mac for more info on how to resolve this.

2.0

Ratings and Reviews

3.9 out of 5

109 Ratings

109 Ratings

Sambuop
,08/24/2018

The best feed reader, but there’s still room for improvement

Reeder is the best way I’ve found to read and manage RSS services like Feedly. It also works great as a client for read-later services like Instapaper. (It might be the only desktop Instapaper client, as far as I know.) The app is full of features, but also very intuitively designed, meaning you won’t have to dig into settings if your demands are pretty simple and you just want to start reading. Reeder also looks great. There are lots of included themes, and they make good use of native macOS flourishes like transparency.

But, even without much in the way of competition, there are still features I’d love to see. It’s possible to use the built-in Mercury Reader service to reformat feed text in a way that’s pretty similar to Safari’s Reader View, but there isn’t a way to do this in Reeder’s built-in browser. And while Reeder has a pretty comprehensive “Services” menu with plenty of ways to share/export websites and feed text, there’s no way to add your own. There are a number of bookmarklets (like “Kill Sticky”) that I’d add in a heartbeat.

This developer deserves your support. And, with that support, I hope the app continues to improve.

Sambuop
,08/24/2018

The best feed reader, but there’s still room for improvement

Reeder is the best way I’ve found to read and manage RSS services like Feedly. It also works great as a client for read-later services like Instapaper. (It might be the only desktop Instapaper client, as far as I know.) The app is full of features, but also very intuitively designed, meaning you won’t have to dig into settings if your demands are pretty simple and you just want to start reading. Reeder also looks great. There are lots of included themes, and they make good use of native macOS flourishes like transparency.

But, even without much in the way of competition, there are still features I’d love to see. It’s possible to use the built-in Mercury Reader service to reformat feed text in a way that’s pretty similar to Safari’s Reader View, but there isn’t a way to do this in Reeder’s built-in browser. And while Reeder has a pretty comprehensive “Services” menu with plenty of ways to share/export websites and feed text, there’s no way to add your own. There are a number of bookmarklets (like “Kill Sticky”) that I’d add in a heartbeat.

This developer deserves your support. And, with that support, I hope the app continues to improve.

michaelcee
,09/25/2017

My “Daily Driver” for news and information

It does a job - parsing diverse news feeds and making them easily readable (not an easy job, considering many sites don’t actually want you reading their stuff from an adless feed).

It’s a plain interface. It shows you what’s read and what’s not. It saves the articles you want saved. It even uses a service that can help you grab articles from sites that don’t publish the whole text in their feeds. (It will also interface with social/saving services, but that’s secondary to me.)

Other readers either try to get too fancy or don’t do those basics properly. That’s why I love Reeder and have paid for it something like 5 times over since version 1. As long as it works for those basics, I’ll gladly pay for future upgrades as well.

michaelcee
,09/25/2017

My “Daily Driver” for news and information

It does a job - parsing diverse news feeds and making them easily readable (not an easy job, considering many sites don’t actually want you reading their stuff from an adless feed).

It’s a plain interface. It shows you what’s read and what’s not. It saves the articles you want saved. It even uses a service that can help you grab articles from sites that don’t publish the whole text in their feeds. (It will also interface with social/saving services, but that’s secondary to me.)

Other readers either try to get too fancy or don’t do those basics properly. That’s why I love Reeder and have paid for it something like 5 times over since version 1. As long as it works for those basics, I’ll gladly pay for future upgrades as well.

pgp
,09/05/2018

Best RSS App, by far

I don’t know how Silvio does it.

An update to resolve some bugs (for memory leak, among other things) was just released. For a fixed price app, the maintenance & pursuit of excellence is commendable. Most apps this good would have a recurring charge. There really aren’t that many new features people would want, so it’s hard to imagine how compelling a paid upgrade to a version 4 could be. The layout options & capabilities of the current version are great. It seems like unless droves of new buyers flood the App store to buy Reeder, it could end up as is forever but Silvio keeps improving the app.

I use Reeder as much as Spark (my favorite email client). I use it on an iPad, iPhone & a MacbookPro; and just like all my favorite apps it is consistent across all those devices. The settings & state of feeds is also sync’ed perfectly. The UI makes for very easy reading & offers choices to theme the app that make reading in low light or bright light a breeze.

If you’re contemplating buying an RSS reader, this is it. (I’ve tried many apps through the years, this is the best & it’s all you need.)

pgp
,09/05/2018

Best RSS App, by far

I don’t know how Silvio does it.

An update to resolve some bugs (for memory leak, among other things) was just released. For a fixed price app, the maintenance & pursuit of excellence is commendable. Most apps this good would have a recurring charge. There really aren’t that many new features people would want, so it’s hard to imagine how compelling a paid upgrade to a version 4 could be. The layout options & capabilities of the current version are great. It seems like unless droves of new buyers flood the App store to buy Reeder, it could end up as is forever but Silvio keeps improving the app.

I use Reeder as much as Spark (my favorite email client). I use it on an iPad, iPhone & a MacbookPro; and just like all my favorite apps it is consistent across all those devices. The settings & state of feeds is also sync’ed perfectly. The UI makes for very easy reading & offers choices to theme the app that make reading in low light or bright light a breeze.

If you’re contemplating buying an RSS reader, this is it. (I’ve tried many apps through the years, this is the best & it’s all you need.)